Amritsar, Treaty of(April 25, 1809), pact concluded between Charles T. Metcalfe, representing the British East India Company, and Ranjit Singh, head of the Sikh kingdom of Punjab(Pañjāb); it . The treaty settled Indo-Sikh relations for a generation. The immediate occasion was the French threat to northwestern India, following Napoleon’s Treaty of Tilsit with Russia (1807) and Ranjit’s attempt to bring the Cis-Sutlej states under his control. The British wanted a defensive treaty against the French and control of Punjab to the Sutlej River. Although this was not a defensive treaty, it did fix the frontier with of lands controlled by Ranjit broadly along the line of the Sutlej River.

Metcalfe’s mission gave Ranjit much respect for the company’s disciplined troops and as well as the determination never to cross swords with themthe British troops. His Ranjit’s further conquests were to the west and north.